On Wed, 08 Sep 2004 06:41:28 +0200, Martin v. Löwis <martin at v.loewis.de> wrote: > I recently looked into properly implementing the "Register Extensions" > feature in the installer; in 2.4a3, not selecting that doesn't really > work. The problem is that MSI only supports installing either both > the "extension server" (the .exe) and the extension, or neither. So > you can chose not to install word.exe, and it won't install the .doc > extension; if you install word.exe, it will associate .doc with it. > > For Python, this leaves us with three options: > 1. Don't make registration of extensions optional; always associate > .py, .pyc, .pyw, .pyo. > 2. Don't support installation-on-demand for extensions. This means > to not use the MSI extension machinery at all, but to directly > write the registry keys that build the extension. Installing > these keys can then be made optional. > 3. Provide another binary that is the "extension server", and > install that independently of python.exe, and pythonw.exe. > In CVS, I have implemented this approach to see whether it > works (it does), and called this binary "launcher.exe". It > is a Windows app which supports a -console argument which also > makes it a console app. This is the the binary that gets > associated with all four extensions, for the "open" verb. > > Currently, I'm in favour of using option 3, but I'd like to hear > whether people would prefer something else instead. > > Regards, > Martin I frequently use the extension feature in a console context; when I am in a directory full of .py files, I can run any one of them by simply typing its name (and possibly command line arguments). The script will then interact through the existing console window. WIll this work? >From your description I fear that this would start the script without console I/O possibility or in a separate window, both of which would make this a no-no. If you can confirm that this works as expected, I think the separate driver is fine, since pretty much by definition you can't pass any command line arguments to Python (although I would hope that the environment variables would still work). -- --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/) Ask me about gmail.
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